Ninu Kang, communications director for the anti-racism organization Mosaic, says the city's newest residents are among the most vulnerable.

"Surrey has been home to a lot of the refugees who are re-settling and are welcomed into Canada," she told CBC News. "[We've seen backlash] against the Muslim community, some backlash towards Syrian refugees settling here."

"It's a concern," she said, noting that the issue isn't unique to the city but rather a symptom of Islamophobic rhetoric that's been perpetuated by certain media outlets, hate groups and politicians.

Kang says the anti-racism network connects local government, charities, community support groups and non-profits to raise awareness against hate speech and crimes.

Their goal is to develop a large support network victims can turn to once they've experienced incidents of racism of discrimination.

Baltej Singh Dhillon says Canada has made strides since his efforts to wear a turban as a police officer sparked both support and outrage.

"The story ends well," he said. "We are becoming more aware. We're learning. We're educating ... we're maturing as a country as a whole."

"[But] we cannot create safe spaces for words, language, speech, voice that has hatred in it," he said.